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hatrack

(59,584 posts)
Mon Aug 16, 2021, 09:48 AM Aug 2021

Message For Canada's Prairie Province Farmers - Brace For Rapid, Jolting Changes

Manitobans who rely on the weather to make a living and turn a profit should be alarmed by the latest United Nations climate report, and should expect more extreme and unpredictable weather in the years and decades to come unless policymakers start to take climate change far more seriously, a local environmental advocate says. Curtis Hull, the project director with Climate Change Connection (CCC) a Manitoba-based environmental group, spoke to the Winnipeg Sun on Wednesday, two days after the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change presented their latest report.

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“Farmers are pretty resilient as a group, but they are starting to see the loss of stationarity and predictability in terms of farming practices,” Hull said. “A lot of farmers learn from their forefathers in terms of their practices, but in many cases those practices simply do not work anymore, because with climate change you’ve now got this massive variability when it comes to climate. “We now swing from years of massive drought to years of massive floods and precipitation, and it’s the kind of situation where farmers are losing the ability to use practices that were used in the past, because now you have to be prepared for absolutely anything.”

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Hull said that what the report tells him is we will see more seasons with extreme drought or extreme precipitation and “far less in between.” “It looks to me like in this part of the world we are looking at the potential for both increased precipitation and for soil drying,” he said.

And while Hull said he knows many Manitobans who do what they can in their homes to reduce waste and battle the effects of climate change, he said at this point the only way that real and meaningful change can take place is for policymakers and governments to make substantial changes. The actual policies that have been put in place so far have not changed that trajectory, and have actually kept us on this high-carbon pathway,” he said. “The policies in place have not been changing that pathway, and I don’t see policies reflective of what we really need to do, which is to greatly reduce that usage of fossil fuels.”

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https://winnipegsun.com/news/news-news/climate-change-forcing-prairie-farmers-to-carve-new-paths

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